The following
tips and marketing ideas could make a great deal
of difference in getting the price you want for
your house.
The point is that a $100,000 difference in the
price of a house may be something you added to
it that cost you a couple of hundred bucks.
Most people buy a house emotionally.
Sure they walk around looking for rising damp
and knocking on the odd wall to see whether it's
hollow, but in house terms this is like kicking
the tyres of a second hand car so the salesman
won't think you are an idiot.
A properly marketed house is capable of getting
the heart pumping overtime and turning brain to
mush before the potential buyer reaches the front
door. So let's begin with the front door - even
before it - the front gate!
Your house may need a good overall paint job,
but if the gate and the fence are freshly painted
and the front door has been done in a designer
colour with a brass lion with a ring in its mouth
for a knocker, you've already told the potential
new owner that he or she is dealing with the sort
of house that will make them look good.
The front door is the gateway and first
impression to your home. A well-kept,
nicely painted (colorfully tactful), well ornamented
door shows the buyer that you care about the details.
A nice knocker, and large brass doorknob are examples
of functional ornamentation that shows that you
have taken care and loved your home; and it may
be a home that they can love as well.
If the front garden is a bit of a mess, plant
a few flowering shrubs which you can buy at the
markets a week or so before the first inspection.
If you have a pathway to the front door then
buy or hire a dozen standard roses in bloom and
bury them in the ground, tub and all, to suggest
that they're the work of a caring owner with old
fashioned home values. Standard roses can add
tens of thousands to the end price.
Don't forget to mow the lawn on the week before
the inspection so that it looks green and inviting
by inspection day.
Always clean the windows. Clean
windows are the sort of thing people don't see,
they feel. And on a sunny Saturday morning, clean
windows can give the interior of the house a crisp
spring look.
If there is a down gutter or two showing on the
front of the house that has rusted through, replace
it - preferably with a copper one. Don't paint
the copper, make it look like a recent repair
you haven't had time to paint.
Copper drainpipes are the sign of an owner who
insists on only the best for his home. Husbands
who are oblivious to the other niceties will pick
this up in a flash, even if they know nothing
about building.
If you get all these first impressions
right, the inside is easy: be tidy but
not spotless; make sure that the hygiene of the
home is right - the bathroom and toilet spotless
(no sign of mould in the shower recess), the kitchen
gleaming.
If you have carpet on the bathroom floor, replace
it with new carpet. Most bathroom carpets, even
in the best houses, are stained.
Make the beds, don't leave washing in the bathroom,
but make the house look lived in.
Flowers should only be where flowers are normally
expected. Don't turn the place into a florist's
shop.
If the house at one time in its history featured
a fireplace which subsequently got blocked up,
unblock it and rebuild it to the authentic design.
Admittedly, this could cost you a few hundred
but it will add $20,000.
Always set the fire with fresh logs and pine
cones, summer or winter, as though it's ready
to be lit at the touch of a match. A house with
a fireplace or two is a deeply atavistic experience
for most people.
The next important factor is smell. Homes that
smell of animals, particularly cats, can cost
you thousands. So board the cat and the dog for
a couple of weeks before the inspection and get
the smell out.
But just as important is putting smell back in.
There are three important smells to know about:
fresh bread, cinnamon and coffee. Most houses
are up for inspection over a two or three week
period and people can often return for a second
look, so varying your smell can be the clincher.
The fresh bread smell is achieved by buying a
large white loaf and opening up its belly and
pouring a bottle of vanilla essence into it and
popping it into the oven at medium heat for half
an hour before the inspection begins.
Remove it before your potential buyers arrive
w/ out team. The result is a home that smells
of freshly baked bread which, as you know, is
the warmest, cleanest, most home-caring smell
there is.
Another smell that kills any other smells that
might have been left behind by the cat or the
parrot, is cinnamon. Simply warm a couple of tablespoons
in a pan and allow the smell to invade the house.
If your home is a bit upmarket or in a trendy
area, then use the famous coffee-bean ploy. Half
a cup of coffee beans roasted in the oven will
fill the house with the aroma of fresh coffee.
Finally, the backyard - it must
look lived in but well kept. So make sure it has
recreational furniture and that this is in good
condition. A child's swing is a terrific asset.
A few hastily planted flowering shrubs can also
make a big buck difference and a nice looking
garden shed or greenhouse can be the clincher.
A couple of citrus trees, a Eureka lemon and
a grapefruit are turn-ons and can be bought in
an advanced state of growth from most nurseries.
And, of course, if there is a pool the water
in it must be perfect. Buy a bottle of water polish
(I'm not kidding) from your pool shop - it gives
the pool a wonderful translucent look.
The thing to remember always is that the buyer
has been out, sometimes for weeks, looking at
houses most of which are identical in appearance
to yours.
The difference, providing your place isn't positively
falling down, will be the little things.
Remember, most people buy a home on first
impressions. The emotional impact they
receive in the first few moments can be critical
to the way they bid at auction or bargain when
it comes down to the sale.
Market your house as though you were
buying it yourself. Remember, a couple
of grand (usually it's less) spent carefully upfront,
can make the difference of tens of thousands of
dollars.
The two or three weeks you put into getting
it ready to sell may be the most profitable investment
of time and money you make this year.
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